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亞裔美國家庭高收入:不是一種歧視的屏障

(2017-12-12 09:41:31) 下一個
“Our poll shows that Asian American families have the highest average income among the groups we’ve surveyed, and yet the poll still finds that Asian Americans experience persistent discrimination in housing, jobs, and at college,” Blendon said in a statement when the report was released. “Over the course of our series, we are seeing again and again that income is not a shield from discrimination.”“我們的民意調查顯示,亞裔美國家庭的平均收入在我們所調查的群體中最高,然而調查仍然發現,亞裔美國人在住房,工作和大學時遭受持續的歧視。”Blendon在聲明中 報告發布了。 “在我們的係列課程中,我們一次又一次地看到,收入不是一種歧視的屏障。”

My comment:

"When in Rome, do as the Romans do definition. When visiting a foreign land, follow the customs of those who live in it. It can also mean that when you are in an unfamiliar situation, you should follow the lead of those who know the ropes."

Around 1950s, Some Americans worried about German immigration was up to 40%, which may transform the US to German speaking country. It turns out those German decedents integrated well into the US, losing their native German speaking. Now, German decedents consists of around 25%, speaking English, part of the US. How about Chinese?

You can hear loud Chinese speaking almost every where. Chinese mind their own business, without alerting around other ethical groups - don't do volunteer for community, less likely donate to common good. No wonder what happens to Chinese Americans. What can you do?

Learning from Jewish, Jewish embrace American culture - you can fill in ...


**
Report finds U.S.-born Asian Americans report more discrimination than immigrantsby Chris Fuchs / Dec.07.2017 / 1:30 PM ET
 
Around one in four Asian Americans reported personally being discriminated against because they’re Asian when applying for jobs and trying to rent or buy housing, according to a new poll.
 
Immigrant Asian Americans were also much less likely to report multiple forms of individual discrimination, including violence and sexual harassment, than their counterparts born in the U.S. or Puerto Rico.
 
Related
 
Opinion: In the Outrage Over Discrimination, How Do We Define 'Asian American'?
 
Those findings came from a report released on Wednesday, entitled “Discrimination in America: Experiences and Views of Asian Americans.” It is part of a series based on a survey conducted for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and National Public Radio.
 
The report details the results for a nationally representative probability sample of 500 Asian-American adults, with a margin of error of 5.8 percent at the 95 percent confidence interval. Interviews were conducted in English, Mandarin, Cantonese, and Vietnamese.
 
Some 3,453 adults in total — at least 18 years old and of various genders, races, ethnicities and identities — were interviewed by phone between Jan. 26 and April 9.
 
“The critical findings are that almost all groups think that in the aggregate they face some discrimination, including whites, but there are very substantial discrimination differences among minority communities,” Robert Blendon, professor of health policy and political analysis at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and co-director of the poll, said in a phone interview.
 
Detailed in the report:
 
More than three in five Asian Americans (61 percent) believe discrimination exists against Asian Americans in the U.S. today, while about a third have experienced slurs and insensitive or offensive comments about their race or ethnicity.
A quarter or more of Asian Americans reported being personally discriminated against because they’re Asian when applying for jobs (27 percent); when being paid equally or considered for promotions (25 percent); and when attempting to rent or purchase housing (25 percent).
Nearly one in five Indian Americans (17 percent) reported they or a family member had been unfairly stopped or treated by police, compared to 12 percent of Asian Americans overall and just 2 percent of Chinese Americans who said the same.
 
The findings also painted a contrast between nonimmigrant and immigrant Asian Americans, noting that those born in the U.S. or Puerto Rico were much more likely to report threats, violence, and sexual harassment.
 
The poll found that 36 percent of nonimmigrant Asian Americans said they or a family member have been threatened or non-sexually harassed because they’re Asian; 20 percent said they’ve experienced violence; and 16 percent said they or someone in their family experienced sexual harassment because they’re Asian, according to the report.
 
The percentages in those same categories for Asian Americans born outside the U.S. were significantly lower — at 15 percent, 6 percent, and 4 percent, respectively.
 
Blendon said these results could reflect one of two things. The first, he said, is that immigrants live in more immigrant communities, so they don’t encounter different racial or ethnic groups in many different circumstances.
 
The other is that they can come from countries and cultures where they were treated very badly by police, the courts, and other institutions, according to Blendon. As a result, they may not report as frequently slurs or being treated differently, he said.
 
Healthcare, however, was different. Immigrant Asian Americans were 17 times more likely than Asian Americans born in the U.S. or Puerto Rico to report having been personally discriminated against when visiting a doctor or health clinic, the report found.
 
The findings also reflected a difference between Asian Americans’ personal experiences of discrimination and perceptions of it in their communities.
 
Related
 
Survey Finds Some Asian-American Youth Face Bullying, Economic Insecurity
 
The percentages were lower when respondents were asked how often, if ever, they believe discrimination occurs to other Asian Americans where they live because they’re Asian.
 
Blendon said it went the other way around for many of the other groups.
 
“Usually more people felt things happened to people like themselves in their community, but not themselves,” he said. “But here it was reversed.”
 
Even as some Asian Americans reported discrimination, a majority believed that Asian Americans in general have equal employment and education opportunities and that they are paid equally to white people, the survey found.
 
Around two in three also said they believe their local government represents their views, and that they can influence what their local government does.
 
“Our poll shows that Asian American families have the highest average income among the groups we’ve surveyed, and yet the poll still finds that Asian Americans experience persistent discrimination in housing, jobs, and at college,” Blendon said in a statement when the report was released. “Over the course of our series, we are seeing again and again that income is not a shield from discrimination.”
 
Follow NBC Asian America on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Tumblr.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/report-finds-u-s-born-asian-americans-report-more-discrimination-n827506

博主聲明 PS12:

(2017-08-28 13:40:36) 下一個

Heritage landmarks of my horizons (我的視野的傳統地標 ) - - -


 

** Epilogue ** 《本貼東借西拿, 作者認領原創; or 版權上帝所有,轉貼榮神益人》

博主聲明/轉載授權說明 - Postscript(epilogue) - 閱讀我寫博文的視野角度 -

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